What makes Seattle livable for me

By SUSAN JONES, atelierjones

Eds. Note: Jones, the founding principal of atelierjones, lives with her husband and two children in a condo near Pike Place Market. She works a few blocks away.

More cool Seattle shots by Michael Nalley at DDB

Seattle’s livability is about the vibrancy of its people: Walk any ten blocks three times over in Seattle’s downtown – stop to say hello to an old friend, walk over to check on your construction site at 1st and Union, stop by a press conference heralding the opening of Seattle’s new Green Lab, run into a client there and set up a meeting for their renovation of their condominium further south on 1st Avenue later in the day, stop at the Creamery at the Pike Place Market to buy fresh milk for breakfast, drop it off at home, then up to the WAC for a swim, walk back to the office for a quick meeting about a new downtown green roof project, then off to meet your client at their home to go over the design of their carbon fiber dining table, stop back home to pick up your daughter for her piano lesson – and you’ve walked 2 miles, half of them straight up hills, swam a  half mile, supported your local market, developed three design projects, seen four friends, and helped this city grow more and more livable with every footstep.

More Seattleites muse about livability here.

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  • Anonymous

    What makes Seattle livable to me is how there are different forms of living options in-city. You can live in the city of Seattle proper, and choose a single-family house, a condo, an apartment, a townhouse, a cottage development or a mansion. Most cities, in my experience, don’t offer such a wide range of options IN the city. You have to go to the suburbs for them. On top of that, it’s a fairly condensed city where you can easily move from one neighborhood to another. Oftentimes, I think Seattlelites don’t realize how lucky we have it.

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